Myjoyonline News
 Home Page
 General News
 Business
 Politics
 Sports
 Health
 Education
 Articles/Features
 Science & Technology
 Entertainment
 Travel/Tourism
 Africa & International
 Nations Cup 2008
 
 
World Economic Activity To Fall
Previous Page
 
 
 
 
 
 
Economic activity is projected to fall by 0.9 per cent in the United States next year as Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries enter a protracted slowdown, according to latest projections.

That of Euro area would fall by 0.5 per cent with that of Japan going down by 0.1 per cent in Japan, a release from the World Bank Office in Accra said on Thursday.

Presenting OECD's gross domestic product (GDP), inflation and unemployment forecasts for these three major economies ahead of the G20 Summit on the financial crisis on 15 November, Jorgen Elmeskov, Director of Policy Studies in the OECD's Economics Department, said a high degree of uncertainty surrounded the outlook.

He said much would depend on the depth and duration of the financial crisis, the
main driver of the current recession, adding that the ongoing adjustment in housing markets still had a long way to go.

Mr Elmeskov said GDP for the OECD countries as a whole was expected to fall by 0.3 per cent year-on-year in 2009 before recovering slightly to grow by 1.5 per cent in 2010.

The average unemployment rate in the OECD area, estimated at 5.9 per cent this
year, is forecast to climb to 6.9 per cent next year and to reach 7.2 per cent in 2010.

Inflation should continue to ease as economic slack puts downward pressure on prices and if, as assumed, commodity prices maintained their recent lower levels.

Against this backdrop, additional macroeconomic stimulus was needed, Elmeskov said.


Source: GNA



       

 
  Popular Stories


Search Our Website
 
 
 
OTHER INTERNATIONAL STORIES
   World Economic Activity To Fall
   Congo refugees 'have to be moved'
   Man 'tried to sell' albino wife
   S Africa's ANC loses top official
   Political parties not security agents
   Entire schools targetted in Congo rebel recruitments
   Food aid reaches Congo rebel town
   Mugabe urged to form government
   UN appeals for DR Congo back-up
   Awulae Attibrukusu re-elected President W/R House of Chiefs
   Obama-Clinton soap opera takes new turn
   Talk or go, DR Congo rebel warns
   African troops to back Congo army
   Italian nuns kidnapped in Kenya
   Mandela mourns icon Miriam Makeba